Central & South Asia

Pakistan in mosque mediation bid

Former PM to lead 'last-ditch' negotiations aimed at ending the Red Mosque standoff.

09 Jul 2007 13:53 GMT

Security forces are tightening the noose around the mosque [AFP]

Musharraf and Shaukat Aziz, the prime minister, held crisis meetings with senior officials on Sunday to weigh options on how to end the standoff.

Security meeting

Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Islamabad said: "Musharraf met with his highest security chiefs, at a time when there is now growing opposition to the stand-off, and people are saying that it should be ended peaefully.

Suspected Islamic fighters meanwhile shot dead three Chinese men in Peshawar, the capital of the North West Province bordering Afghanistan, on Sunday.

A fourth Chinese man was wounded in the raid at their residence in what security sources termed an apparent revenge attack over the mosque siege.

Students affiliated to the mosque have troubled the government with an anti-vice campaign since January, which has involved the abduction of several people they linked to prostitution, including seven Chinese.

The Red Mosque has been besieged for seven days [AFP]

Security officials said that two Pakistani commanders from Harkatul-Jihad-e-Islami, a group linked to the beheading of US journalist Daniel Pearl and 2003 attempts to assassinate Musharraf, were inside the mosque.

Fifteen of those inside the mosque have been issued with suicide jackets, one senior official said, citing intercepts.

On Sunday, the government released 152 students who were detained after leaving the mosque.

Aziz reiterated the government's call for those in the mosque to release men, women and children allegedly being held as human shields and surrender.

Ghazi, 43, remained defiant. He and his followers have written wills saying that they would die rather than surrender, and that "martyrdom" would spark an Islamic revolution in Pakistan, a source at the mosque told AFP.

"Our blood will not go to waste," Ghazi's will said.

Leaflets meanwhile have been distributed in Miranshah, the main town in the troubled North Waziristan tribal district bordering Afghanistan, urging Muslims to take up arms in revenge for students killed in the mosque.